US Vietnam veteran refuses to pay fine over Hamas sign at South Yorkshire protest
Michael Rabb was among up to 500 people who gathered outside Sheffield City Hall for the protest

A 77-year-old US military veteran has told a judge he will not pay more than £2,300 in fines and costs after he was found guilty of carrying a sign supporting Hamas at a protest in South Yorkshire.
Michael Rabb, of Boulder, Colorado, was among up to 500 people who had gathered outside Sheffield City Hall for the protest on October 21 2023 over the ongoing Hamas/Israel conflict.
The former fighter pilot was spotted carrying a homemade sign which read āStand With Hamas, End Israel, Free Palestine,ā City of London Magistratesā Court heard.
District Judge Annabel Pilling was sentencing Rabb after finding him guilty at trial of a charge of displaying an article, namely a sign, in such a way or in such circumstances as to arouse reasonable suspicion that he was a member or supporter of a proscribed organisation.
The judge ordered Rabb to pay a Ā£1,000 fine, which she said was ādesigned to hurtā, Ā£930 costs and a Ā£400 surcharge.
Rabb, who stood throughout sentencing, responded: āNo judge, Iām not going to pay. I refuse to pay.ā
He was then warned by the judge, who said he had āextremely strongly held viewsā, that he may find himself in contempt of court and was given seven days to make the payout in full.
Hamas is a proscribed organisation under the Terrorism Act and the prosecution had said it was not necessary for Rabb to show support for the group in order to take part in the peaceful public protest.
The protest was staged two weeks after Hamasās deadly October 7 attack on Israel.
In sentencing, the judge told Rabb that he was of previous good character and that in having āserved for your country you have had exemplary characterā.
She added āit is clear that you did not appreciate that Hamas was a proscribed organisationā and that Rabb had been āpeaceful and co-operativeā during the investigation, which did not find him in possession of any terrorist-related material.
Rabb told the court: āI am a 77-year-old USA citizen, a veteran who has served as a fighter pilot for the US Navy in Vietnam.
āI know what it is to do military actions. I have been engaged in the struggle to free Palestine for several years and participated in several missions to Palestine. I have been to Gaza and know how the people are being genocided by the state of Israel.
āI have been in prison in Israel and deported for my activism. Iām here with you to say āYes, I stand with Hamasā.
āIām here as a tourist. Iām retired, have a small military pension and social security and that is the way I live.ā

Earlier the court had been told that Rabb left the protest after having been spoken to about the sign but later returned.
The sign caused ādistressā among organisers, potentially inflamed tensions and the police were asked to step in to talk to him, prosecutor Sebastian Walker said.
He said Rabb had shown no remorse or regret for what he had done.
When Rabb was approached by a uniformed police officer, he said: āWhatās the problem. We are standing with Palestine.ā
When he was told that he may be committing a terror offence, Rabb asked āItās against the law to say this?ā and added āNo way, it cannot be.ā
He was later arrested.
Under cross-examination, Mr Walker asked: āDo you accept that to protest against Israelās actions in the conflict, it was not necessary to specifically talk of your support for Hamas?ā
Rabb responded: āI suppose you could say anything you wanted but it was critical to my stance and to the people of Palestine to support and stand with Hamas.
āHamas took armed resistance to the overwhelming attacks that Israel has been committing for years.ā
Rabb told the court that while mass murder was taking place, he was simply holding a sign and carrying out a peaceful non-violent public protest.
He described his actions as a ālegitimate act of civil disobedienceā which was not disproportionate and claimed his arrest was an attempt to shut down dissent.
Rabb described the use of the Terrorism Act to bring him to court in this way as āarbitraryā and that by any standards of ādecencyā he should be found not guilty.